Opinion No. Oag 97-79, (1979)
This text of 68 Op. Att'y Gen. 323 (Opinion No. Oag 97-79, (1979)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
CHARLOTTE M. HIGBEE, Commissioner Personnel Commission
You advise that two of the three members of the Personnel Commission have resigned, leaving you as the only member. You ask whether you are authorized, during the period of these vacancies, to finally decide contested cases that are before the Commission pursuant to see.
In my opinion, the answer is yes.
Section
Section
The legislative intent under sec.
The power to act as the Commission includes all subjects on which the Commission is empowered to act, including cases before the Commission in which you sat as a hearing examiner. In this situation you would be exercising the same powers ordinarily exercised by a fully constituted Commission, and your decisions similarly are subject to the same provisions for judicial review. *Page 325
In arriving at this conclusion, I have considered the argument that there is no vacancy caused by the resignations of two members of the Commission until their successors are chosen and qualify for office. Section
Resignations shall be made in writing, shall be addressed and delivered to the officer or body prescribed in this section and shall take effect, in the case of an officer who is not a school district officer and whose term of office continues by law until a successor is chosen and qualifies, upon the qualification of the successor; and in the case of other officers . . . at the time indicated in the written resignation, or if no time is therein indicated, then upon delivery of the written resignation.
Members of the Commission hold office until their successors qualify. See, State ex rel. Thompson v. Gibson,
For a number of reasons I cannot accept the argument that there are no vacancies on the Commission despite the resignations of two members, even absent the qualification of any successors. First, the "shall" in sec.
My opinion in 66 Op. Att'y Gen. 192 (1977) is not applicable here. In that opinion, I concluded that a resignation from a seven person board nevertheless required a quorum of four, the implication being that a resignation or vacancy does not reduce the number of votes needed to do business. However, that conclusion in part rested *Page 326
on sec.
The difference between sec.
Similarly, this additional language makes inapposite 26 Op. Att'y Gen. 41 (1937), which concluded that the powers of the Public Service Commission could not devolve on a single commissioner. The applicable statute, however, provided that "a vacancy shall not impair the right of the remaining commissioners to exercise all the powers of the commission." 26 Op. Att'y Gen. at 42 (emphasis added). By contrast, sec.
BCL:CDH
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